Current environmental issues





California’s Water Allocation Plan

On October 29th of 2008, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) announced that it would be allocating only 15% of the water requested by thecommunities served by the State Water Project (SWP) in the State California;this represents the second lowest allocation level in over 40 years. Several factorshave contributed to this conservative plan including a prolonged drought in theregion, lower than average snowfall, and a court decision to protect a small fish.

By: Glenn
tober 29th of 2008, the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) announced that it would be allocating only 15% of the water requested by the

communities served by the State Water Project (SWP) in the State California;

this represents the second lowest allocation level in over 40 years. Several factors

have contributed to this conservative plan including a prolonged drought in the

region, lower than average snowfall, and a court decision to protect a small fish.

The California DWR is tasked with taking this all into account and managing the

State’s fresh water resources; a difficult task even in a wet year.

California, and indeed most of the southwest United States is in the midst of

a multi-year drought. Lower than expected rainfall has been recorded for the

past 2 years, and that trend is projected to continue in 2009. In fact the

pattern of repeated drought is well known to archeologists who study the

ancient cultures of the Southwest and to the Native Americans and settlers

who lived through such cycles. To overcome this hurdle, the State of California

began to build a system of canals, dams and reservoirs decades ago; this work

is ongoing and the DWR is currently the state agency tasked with the

maintenance, repair and construction of these facilities. These structures

have the effect of ‘leveling’ the wet and dry cycles, allowing the State to

collect and preserve a large percentage of the rainfall and snowmelt in the

wet years and then use that to sustain the State’s water demand during

the dry years.

Over the past two decades, California has seen two trends which both

contributed to the current low reservoir levels. The first is the increase in

population seen by California; over 15 million new citizens came to the state

in the past 30 years, almost doubling the population. This growing populace

obviously puts a greater demand on the state’s water supply, siphoning more

water from the reservoirs than planners 50 years ago expected. The second

factor may be more of a surprise; the past 30 years have been fairly wet years

and the State of California regularly had ‘surplus’ water. This bounty was one

of the main reasons that California’s Central Valley saw such agricultural

productivity during these years. Certainly there were dry periods, but on the

whole, the State experienced some of its wettest years in the 20th century from

1978 to 1998, the graph below from the University of California at San Diego

reinforces this point. The graph also gives some insight into the lag that

accompanies the rainfall cycle; for several years at the beginning of a ‘dry’

period, the groundwater supplies appear to be bountiful. This effect, however,

is only temporary and the abundant supply quickly disappears; California

appears to be entering this plunge to drought, currently.

Another interesting factor in California’s water dilemma is, of all things, a fish.

In 2007, a Federal District Court judge protected the delta smelt, citing its

declining population and short lifespan as reasons for protection. The delta

smelt is a small, silver fish approximately 3-4 inches long; it lives in the San Joaquin-Sacramento River and has a one year lifespan.As it happens, these pumps generate the water pressures which allow the California and South Bay aqueducts to reach their

destinations. Because of this court ruling, the State of California lost the ability

to deliver approximately 625,000 acre-feet of water to central and southern California.

The State’s Governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, has proposed building new dams

and channels to avoid the environmental issues associated with the delta smelt

and has been caucusing with other governors in the region to reach a common

understanding that may help to ease the situation. In the meantime local water

managers, faced with reservoirs that are less than half-full, are calling for

immediate reductions in use by farmers and households. If the State’s water

allocation plan holds at 15%, many fields will sit idle this summer. Of course,

a wetter winter or greater than expected snowfall would allow the DWR to

upwardly revise their allocation; this happened last year when the DWR initially

projected a 25% allocation and then later revised that to 35% after a wet winter.

But that isn’t a guarantee and the DWR’s conservative planning appears to be

warranted at this time. Looking forward, however, it appears that the State of

California needs a revision to its water plan, one that plans on much less water

availability for the next several years.

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California’s Water Allocation Plan</a>

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